Labadee, Nord, Haiti, North America
Labadee is a port located on the northern coast of Haiti within the arrondissement of Cap-Haïtien in the Nord department. It is a private resort leased to Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., for the exclusive use of passengers of its three cruise lines: Royal Caribbean International, Celebrity Cruises, and Azamara Club Cruises, until 2050. Royal Caribbean has contributed the largest proportion of tourist revenue to Haiti since 1986, employing 300 locals, allowing another 200 to sell their wares on the premises for a fee and paying the Haitian government $12 USD per tourist. The resort is completely tourist-oriented, and is guarded by a private security force. The site is fenced off from the surrounding area, and passengers are not allowed to leave the property. Food available to tourists is brought from the cruise ships. A controlled group of Haitian merchants are given sole rights to sell their merchandise and establish their businesses in the resort. Although sometimes described as an island in advertisements, it is actually a peninsula contiguous with the island of Hispaniola. The cruise ship moors to the pier at Labadee capable of servicing the Oasis class ships, which was completed in late 2009. Attractions include a Haitian flea market, beaches, watersports, a water-oriented playground, an alpine coaster, and the largest zip-line over water. The location is named after the marquis de La Badie, a Frenchman who first settled the area in the 17th century. The peninsula and a village were named Labadie. The cruise company spells the name Labadee to make it easier for English-speakers to pronounce. In 1991, a journalist revealed that passengers who disembarked at the location were not informed they were in Haiti. In November 2001, a crew member from the cruise line Royal Caribbean was attacked on Labadee in an apparent robbery. The assailants were arrested by Haitian police. In February 2004, Royal Caribbean temporarily suspended use of the stop due to political unrest in the country. However, Royal Caribbean has since returned to using this private port. In 2009, Royal Caribbean made US$55 million improvements to the facilities, including upgrading port facilities to allow docking of their largest cruise ships. In January 2010, just after the 2010 Haiti earthquake, Royal Caribbean decided to continue its luxury cruises to the private port. The corporation announced it would be donating US$1 million to fund relief efforts in Haiti, and to use cruise ships to ferry relief supplies and personnel. In January 2016, local Haitians in boats peacefully but noisily blocked the port, in protests against the current Haitian government and upcoming elections. Royal Caribbean's Freedom of the Seas cancelled their port stop on January 19 as a result.
Le projet des Franciscaines : l'imaginaire à l'oeuvre
L'imaginaire à l’œuvre tient lieu de programme d'action pour les Franciscaines, lieu culturel d'un nouveau genre dont les travaux s'achèveront en 2020. Dans cet ancien lieu de culte, reconfiguré à la mesure d'un projet culturel, chacun sera invité à laisser son imaginaire circuler pour vivre une expérience inédite, ouverte à tous les possibles. Méditer, se recueillir, se recentrer sur soi : à ces gestes répétés depuis plus d'un siècle par les religieuses qui occupèrent le site avant de le céder à la ville en 2012, le lieu associe désormais : s'informer, se parler, s'écouter, se cultiver, découvrir, s'enrichir, traîner, se distraire, à travers des parcours ajustés à chaque profil de visiteurs.